Christian Witnesses for God
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture IV
August 28, 1844
.
Text.--Isa. 42:10: "Ye are My witnesses, saith the Lord."
In this discourse I shall show:
I. What is implied in an appeal to witness.
II. What is essential to the competency of a witness.
III. State some things that affect his credibility.
IV. God's cause must depend upon the faithfulness of his witnesses.
V. The conditions which make testimony for God available.
I. What is implied in an appeal to witness.
It is implied,
II. What is essential to the competency of a witness.
But few things are required for competency.
Witnesses must be of suitable age, and have the necessary qualifications to
understand the circumstances to which they testify; and they must have been so
situated as to speak from personal knowledge of the things which they state, and
not from report or hearsay, or conjecture. These are the principle things which
go to make a person a competent witness. So God's witnesses must be able to
speak from personal knowledge, it will be of no great account to tell what
others know, or what you have heard reported. You must speak if you testify at
all, and do any good by your testimony, from actual knowledge; you must state
facts which your own eyes have seen, ears have heard, and hands have handled.
III. Mention some things that affect the credibility of a witness.
By credibility is meant the degree of credit to which a witness is entitled. It
is very manifest witnesses may differ very much in the degree of credit which
should be given to them. Some are entitled to the utmost confidence, and others
to little or none at all. And a multitude of things must affect their
credibility, must conspire to give them credibility or otherwise.
IV. The success of every cause decided by testimony must depend on the character of the witnesses and the testimony which they give.
The success of God's moral government is conditional on faith. Faith depends on conviction that the things are true. But how is conviction produced? By evidence. Whence comes evidence? From witnesses. Who are the witnesses? God's real people, and the Holy Spirit giving weight to their testimony. His true children are the only competent witnesses, the only ones qualified to testify. They are of lawful age, and can speak from personal knowledge. They are the best of all witnesses, and the only competent ones. Their testimony will decide the question, and ought to decide it.
V. The conditions of the availability of the testimony of Christians for God.
VI. The responsibility of the witnesses.
REMARKS.
1. The world is now, and always has been stumbled with the contradictory
testimony that nominal Christians give, for they intrude their testimony, though
God has not called them to testify, and does not wish their witness. He calls
His own people, and none others to bear testimony; but multitudes pretend to be
God's people, and perhaps sometimes think they are so, and set themselves up,
and are reckoned by others as witnesses, who know nothing at all of God, and
they bear false witness; for they think they know, and testify as if they do
know; and by giving such testimony they overbear the true witnesses, and the
minds of the jury and the by-standers are puzzled, and they are at a loss to
know what to think, or else the verdict is given against God and religion.
2. The nominal Christians, mere professors, so greatly outnumber God's real
people, that their witness in the minds of men generally, glad to get rid of an
unwelcome subject, entirely outweighs that of the true witnesses, and the world
taking the mass together say, There is nothing in religion. And if they were
right in taking the mass of professors as the witnesses, they would be right in
their decision. If the testimony of the great body is to be taken as the true
Christian witness, what else can the decision be, what other verdict can be
rendered? What in such a case must they say? Just what they do say. But observe,
the evil lies herein, not that God loses His cause for lack of evidence, but
that those come forward and obtrude themselves upon the stand who never have
been summoned, and who know nothing at all of the matter. But I remark,
3. God will reject their testimony in the great court of equity and errors at
the day of judgment, and with it both the persons who gave it, and the persons
who have been blinded by it and have stumbled over it, and both classes together
will be sent off to the eternal prison-house. For God has made no appeal to any
such incompetent witnesses. To His true children He has appealed, and no others,
and those who attend the trial should observe who are admitted and who are
rejected from the stand. It is true indeed, that since multitudes press forward
to bear witness, and it is not always decided on the spot who are competent, and
who are incompetent, but they are allowed each to tell his story whether to the
point or not, whether consistent or otherwise, there is great danger of
deception, great danger of being stumbled, but it behooves by-standers to be on
their guard, to be most particular whose testimony they receive, for if they
carelessly rely on the testimony of a witness whom God does not call, they, and
they only are responsible and must bear the consequence of their carelessness.
It becomes men to understand well--what indeed they may fully understand if they
will--who are true, and who are only pretended, and self-called witnesses. For
their salvation hangs on their careful discrimination.
4. As the nominal Christians are a vast majority, the true are suspected of
heresy, of fanaticism, of insanity. Those who know God, are so few among the
vast many, (for sure "so many can't be wrong,") that their witness is counted
false. They are declared not to know, to be presuming, and over-zealous, who are
in fact the only ones who do know anything as they ought to know it. It is sad
to think how the truth is perverted, and pronounced false, for the hypocrisy and
ignorance of professors, and carelessness of sinners.
5. How true this fact is of ministers, that even they are false witnesses of
God. O, how many are crying out against the most precious truths of the Gospel,
and thus leading others to doubt their truth and power.
6. The true witnesses themselves have often fallen into gross inconsistencies,
and thus destroyed the weight of their own testimony, and greatly weakened the
force of the testimony of others. And this is the special aim of the adversary.
It is Satan's chosen policy to prevail over the real people of God, and thus to
strike away at a blow what they have before done. If he can nullify the true
testimony--the witness of those who do know, he is safe enough, for that of
others only turns on his own account.
How often have real Christians fallen under powerful temptations, and then the
force of their testimony is gone--its value is lost, it will not be believed.
They have fallen, and who will credit what they said before? When a person of
high religious reputation falls into sin, it emboldens scoffers to excess, and
leads multitudes to turn away, and dispirits numbers of real seekers after
piety. That's the way it goes--exclaims the scoffing crew. There is nothing real
there--say the careless. O my God, he has fallen! Can I hope to succeed? --cries
the timid inquirer. What in influence does such conduct exert! When there is a
traitor among the disciples, what havoc does his defection produce!
7. Many who are, perhaps, or may be supposed to be true witnesses, have very
little to say. They seem to have their abode among the first principles of the
doctrine of Christ; they have tapered away and dwindled down in religion; they
have grown almost none at all--or perhaps grown downwards; they know little
more--perhaps no more than at first. The command, "grow in grace, and in the
knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ," has by no means engaged their attention.
They do not seem to know what is meant by growing in the knowledge of Christ.
Many seem to stop on the threshold--they appear to know next to nothing of
Christ by personal experience--they have not grown up into Him, they do not go
on and increase, learning first one and then another, and another of Christ's
offices and relations. Instead of gaining new knowledge every day--of being able
to say, "There, I did not know that; I have learned something about God; I never
thought of that before"--instead of learning something here and something there,
of growing day by day in experience of the grace of Christ, they do not grow at
all, but remain your babes, mere tyros in divine knowledge. And when they are
called to testify, they have to say they know very little of the matter. And
when a witness know but little of the case, when he stammers and hesitates, the
jury get weary of hearing his pother, and the judge will say--"That man know not
what he's talking of. It is not worth while to waste the time in hearing him."
How remarkable it is that Christians can say so little from personal
acquaintance with God. How exceedingly little they can say. Live with them for
years, attend prayer and conference meeting with them for years--and what do you
hear them say? Their experience is not more than an inch long--they will tell
all they ever knew in ten minutes. Long ago they were converted, now and then
they have a conviction, they feel compunction and sorrow for sin, a desire to do
better, faint feelings of worship and adoration arise continually. But O, they
have never gone within the veil, they have tarried without in the outer courts,
and the glorious inner sanctuary, which was opened by the sacrifice of the great
Atonement--the sacred Holy of Holies their eyes have never looked upon--those
deep and flowing springs which rise beneath the very throne, they never drank
of--they never have felt flowing through their enraptured souls, that deep,
broad river of peace, which pours its streams through the channels of
salvation--their eyes have never been opened to behold the great things of God,
and with ever new revelations, brighter and yet brighter still, to sit entranced
in joy so that they can tell and tell and never be tired of telling the things
which God has done for them, and the beauties which He has showed them. No,
alas! their story is soon told--the same oft repeated, mournful tale, alike
dishonorable to God and disgraceful to themselves.
There is a great fault in these witnesses. With every facility afforded them to
make them able to bear a most impressive testimony for God and His Christ, they
neglect them all, and their mouths are shut. Impressive testimony? Hear a
Christian, one indeed, one in a high degree, tell his story. See the tears
start, see them trickle down the cheek all over the assembly. He will make more
impression than 500 unfeeling sermons. His statements, how simple! His faith,
how artless! His trust, how child-like! I knew a young man, a sailor, converted
on board ship. He had been brought up at sea, and was an infidel; or rather knew
nothing of religion. On a voyage to China, in a most remarkable manner, he
became convinced of the truth of the Bible. He became very anxious to have a
Bible, and at length got one of an old sailor who had one, but cared nothing
about it. The Bible was old--he covered it carefully to preserve it choice, and
then he read it. But with what emotion! how his bosom swelled! how his tears
flowed! It was the word of God; every word of it was true; every promise was
sure. How wonderful it appeared to him--he sat and wondered, and read, and wept,
and wept, and read; so happy was he, he forgot every thing but God, and Christ,
and his Bible. On their voyage, the ship stopped at a port for supplies. The
city was illuminated, it was a perfect blaze of light. As the ship lay at
anchor, our sailor walked the deck and looked at the illuminated town, "I was so
happy" said he, "with my bible and my God, I could not help exclaiming--I am
happier than all of you." He said he did not once think whether he were a
Christian, but his soul was all absorbed in love and joy.
After this relation, our sailor told his experience of the faithfulness of God.
It appeared to him a small thing indeed that God should answer prayer--nothing
remarkable or strange. God has said he would hear His people's cry, and why
should He not? He said it seemed no way strange that God should change the wind
and give them a favorable breeze in answer to his prayer. He would take his
watch on deck, the wind would be contrary, he would pray for a fair wind, and
there was never so much as a doubt but God would give him his request. He would
kneel to pray, the wind would be blowing on his larboard cheek, and before he
arose, often it would turn and come from the starboard. This he would do many a
night. "I did not think it strange or wonderful," said he, "I supposed He
answered every body's prayer just so. I never thought of doubting His
faithfulness and His readiness to answer my prayer." Thus he went on through the
voyage, constantly trusting, and praying, and rejoicing, and learning every day
a new lesson in the unsearchable riches of the knowledge of Christ. His story,
as he told it, ran through the congregation like a stream of electricity. He
told a multitude of things, all tending to unfold the simple and child-like
faith and joy in Christ which his soul possessed, and which, but for the hearty
simplicity, and undeniable sincerity and truthfulness on the very fact of it,
would not have been believed. He was full of it; he would come to my room after
I became acquainted with him, with a whole budget full which the Lord had taught
him of the Bible and his own soul. I wish you could hear his testimony--it was
as simple-hearted as a little child's. He did not know what spiritual pride was.
He took not the least credit to himself, as though he were anything, or as
though God had favored him especially, for he did not know but that every body
thought, and felt, and trusted just as he did, and was answered just as he was.
Now if Christians could testify as he could, they would exert a power well nigh
irresistible--it would be most over-whelming. When he told his story, many
things were so remarkable, I went and inquired of a friend who I knew was
acquainted with the sailor, (it was the seaman's minister,) concerning the young
man. "Ah," said the minister, "he is a true bill, depend upon it." And indeed,
every body could see it was so, and yet it was remarkable, to hear a man relate
so much about God from personal experience; for he had not learned it from man I
assure you; no indeed, it was not what he had heard another say, but the Lord
Himself had, at the opening of the door, come in, and they had sat down to a
feast of fat things--to a banquet of love. O it was rich, delightful. I would
rather hear him speak, than five hundred merely learned men, who should have no
Christian experience. His very looks were preaching, and all he said was
preaching of a most excellent kind, for it came direct from a heart overflowing
with love, and full of the Spirit of the Lord.
8. There is there and here a most precious witness springing up in the church.
God is never wholly without such witnesses. Blessed be His name! once in a while
one will arise. And, glory to God! He is multiplying such through the land. Go
through and visit the churches, and every now and then you will find a soul
full; so heavenly, so Christ-like, so deeply in communion with God--listen to
its experience, and you will seem to be fanned by the wings of angels. They are
multiplying where the truth has been proclaimed in its fullness, and received in
simplicity of heart. Such witnesses are bearing their testimony, and it is
taking effect; and though there is much to overcome thereby, it will be
overcome, as certainly as truth can affect human minds, and the Spirit can
convert them.
9. Many Christians are afraid and ashamed to say much. They have feared to be
reminded of their inconsistencies. And indeed it would be so. It is best that
such as cannot show a consistent walk, should keep silent. The stiller they keep
the better, till they come and walk with God and do His will.
10. The relations that Christians sustain to God and the world, should be with
them a most powerful argument in prayer to God. I fear Christians do not enough
consider this, that they may come to God and say reverently--O Lord, Thou hast
required such and such a thing of me, to testify for Thee, Thou wilt call me as
a witness for Thee--now Lord, make me able to testify, let me know Thee, bring
me into Thy pavilion and let me be ravished with Thy love. O, teach me the
hidden glories of Thy word, that I may be able to speak what I know, to testify
what I have seen. Make up your mind, Christian, be single-hearted, and go to God
and say--O Lord, I wish to bear emphatic testimony, so that men shall be
constrained to believe--urge it on the Lord, and rely on His word, expecting to
be heard. This is a most cogent argument at the throne of grace, one that will
prevail with God for you.
11. God's witnesses should realize that they are watched on every hand--that
they are watched for inconsistencies--that there is a continual endeavor to
impeach them as witnesses, to destroy their credibility. And if any thing can be
found in the least degree erroneous--that can throw any shadow of doubt over
your testimony, it will surely be taken up. Bear this in mind, and take care to
live so, and speak so that they shall be compelled to say, however their hearts
may writhe under it, that you are in the right.
12. There is nothing so fatal to a party in court, as the failure of its own
witnesses through ignorance, or inconsistent testimony, or perfidy. Where a
party's own witnesses know nothing of his case, or tell contradictions, or will
not tell what they know, how can he maintain his cause? Who shall stand up for
him?
13. Since God throws Himself upon our integrity, and uprightness, and candor, we
should consider where we are. Consider, God casts His cause on you, Christians,
"Ye are My witnesses," "Ye are Hy witnesses." How deeply should you realize your
position; how you should be weighed down with the burden of your
responsibility--with the importance of knowing all you may know, of testifying
all you may testify, of bearing so straight forward and unassailable a testimony
as to carry conviction irresistibly to all around you.
14. Christians should remember that they are always under oath. The making a
profession is, so to speak, taking an oath for God. They are bearing testimony
all the time, are all the time on the stand in court, before the judge, and
jury, and bystanders, constantly under the eye of those who are to decide the
case. This should be borne in mind. There is no discharge in this suit while
life lasts.
15. Professors will of course be considered as witnesses, whether God calls them
or not. Your testimony, professor, will be taken, though you be only a false
one. How fearful is your position if you have made a profession of religion--the
eyes of the world, of God, of all are upon you; your deposition will be written,
counted upon, read in court, have its weight in settling the question in the
mind of those concerned in the issue. How incalculably important for you to
remember who and what you are.
Brethren, do we live, act in such a manner that those around us, by taking
knowledge of us, by taking pattern of us, shall get and exhibit a true picture
of religion? How solemn a question this is! What a responsibility is assumed by
ministers and young men preparing for the ministry, and by all young people
educating for the Christian field! What a cloud of witnesses are here! What
testimony might here be given. Are you resolved, young men, young women, that
nothing shall be wanting in your testimony, in your life, in your experience,
that can be obtained by the utmost diligence on your part? Are you resolved? If
you are, how shall we rejoice to lend you all the help possible in effecting
your noble purpose, to fit you to go out and proclaim aloud your testimony. But
if you are only serving yourself and the devil, if you are seeking your own, and
not the things of Christ, how much will your labor and our labor be misapplied.
How are we mis-employed in fitting you--for what? For what? To fight against God
and good in the world, and then be food for the flames of hell! A church is a
cloud of witnesses--this people is a host of witnesses. And if ever a people
were looked upon as witnesses, this is the people. Your testimony, whatever it
be, is going out through all the land; the church and the world are hearing it;
when one of you falls, the tale is told with trumpet-tongue through America,
through Europe, in the islands of the sea. The missionaries in the far off isles
hear it and mourn, from the rising to the setting sun. O, brethren, how shall we
give such a testimony as to be heard till holiness shall cover the earth as the
waters cover the sea?
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